The Montclair Map Task: Balance, Efficacy, and Efficiency in Conversational Interaction

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Abstract

This paper introduces a conversational speech corpus collected during the completion of a map-matching task that is available for research purposes via the Montclair State University Digital Commons Data Repository. The Montclair Map Task is a new, role-neutral conversational task that involves paired iconic maps with labeled landmarks and a path drawn from a start point, around various landmarks, to a finish mark. One advantage of this task-oriented corpus is the ability to derive independent objective measures of task performance for both members of a conversational pair that can be related to aspects of communicative style. A total of 96 native English speakers completed the task in 16 same-sex female, 16 same-sex male, and 16 mixed-sex pairings. Conversations averaged 32 minutes in duration, yielding approximately 217,000 words. The transcription protocol delineates events such as speaking turns, inter-turn intervals, landmark phrases, fillers, pauses, overlaps, and backchannels, making this corpus a useful tool for investigating dynamics of conversational interaction. Analyses of communication efficacy and efficiency reveal that male pairs of talkers were less efficient than female and mixed-sex pairs with respect to partner map-matching task performance.

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Pardo, J. S., Urmanche, A., Gash, H., Wiener, J., Mason, N., Wilman, S., … Decker, A. (2019). The Montclair Map Task: Balance, Efficacy, and Efficiency in Conversational Interaction. Language and Speech, 62(2), 378–398. https://doi.org/10.1177/0023830918775435

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